https://hakirah.org/vol27Goldman.pdf
Review Essay Nietzsche, Soloveitchik and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy by Daniel Rynhold and Michael J. Harris (Cambridge University Press, 2018) 316 pp
https://hakirah.org/vol27Goldman.pdf
Review Essay Nietzsche, Soloveitchik and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy by Daniel Rynhold and Michael J. Harris (Cambridge University Press, 2018) 316 pp
Based upon Rabbi Robert Blau’s notes taken at Bernard Revel Graduate School in the late 1940s. This is the first of a three-part series covering thirteen lectures.
https://hakirah.org/vol27Triebitz.pdf
R YY Weinberg: Chas v'shalom to say that rabbi soloveitchik was a student of mine. He came to shiur that I gave a few times at the rabbinical seminary He honored me by coming to my shiur. Everyone even then already knew what an illui he was." The Rav was in his 20s.
The Making of My Most Recent Book, A Thirty-Year Story (Part 47) || Dr. Marc Shapiro - YouTube
48:37
"Marriage is not just an ordinary conception. It is not just a civil commitment, or a utilitarian, mundane partnership. It is an existential commitment, a personalistic covenant. The souls of two lonely people join. Two strangers decide to unite destinies, to share in the same fate, to keep together, suffer together, rejoice together, travel together and pay the toll of the road jointly. In order to take on such an all-inclusive, all-encompassing commitment, one cannot trust anybody. One must know to whom he dedicates his life intimately and well."
Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, The Rav Thinking Aloud on the Parsha, Sefer Bamidbar, pp. 86-87.
Mystical philosophers long for immersion in the silence of absolute unity. The Greek philosopher Plotinus and all those who followed him were filled with such secret longings. But Judaism’s goal is not the same as that of the mystics with their via negativa, or negative way. The latter aspired to overcome the variety and uniqueness of man’s personality, recommending the negation of people’s variegated mental and physical existence for the sake of attaining pure, simple unity with no objective content. In denying the ontic independence of human beings, they came to deny their essence as well. They therefore recommended the via purgativa (method of elimination), which leads to unio mystica (mystic unification). The individual must empty out the content of his variegated life and freeze into a focal eternal point, lacking all dimension and context, and confine himself to the One.
But Judaism, directed by the Halakha says, “This is not the way.” First of all, one cannot speak of man uniting with God, but only of man cleaving to God. Second, man does not cleave to God by denying his actual essence, but, on the contrary, by affirming his own essence. The actual, multicolored human personality becomes closer to God when the induvial lives his own variegated original life, filled with goals, initiative, and activity , without imagining some prideful insolent independence. Then and only then does the personality being to have a divine existence. Judaism insists that destroying man’s uniqueness and originality does not bring man closer to God, as the mystics imagined. Man’s road to God does not wind among faraway hidden places – in which man concentrates on a mysterious pyre in which his individuality goes up in flames – but, rather, among the spaces of real being, filled with movement and transformation. (Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, And From There You Shall Seek, MeOtzar HaRav, pp. 87-88).